Language, Accents and Why Diversity in Care Should Never Be a Barrier
We’ve lost count of how many times we’ve heard comments about language or accents in care settings. Sometimes it’s direct, but more often it’s the quieter version where there is assumptions about understanding, capability, or professionalism based purely on how someone sounds when they speak.
It’s something we feel needs to be spoken about more openly.
In care, communication is essential. Of course it is. People need to feel understood, safe, and confident in the support they receive. But somewhere along the way, “clear communication” has too often been misinterpreted as “must sound like us” or “must speak in a certain way”. That’s where bias starts to creep in.
We’ve been informed of care professionals dismissed, overlooked, or questioned not because of their ability, but because of their accent. We’ve heard of capable, experienced individuals treated as though they are less competent simply because English isn’t their first language or because their voice sounds different to what someone expects.
These moments are often micro-aggressions, small comments, repeated assumptions, or quiet doubts that accumulate over time. Things like:
“Can they understand instructions properly?”
“I just struggle to hear them.”
“Are they fully fluent?”
On the surface, these may sound like concerns about safety or clarity. But underneath, they can reflect something more uncomfortable: unconscious bias. And in some cases, it goes further than micro-aggressions. It becomes outright exclusion.
The reality is that many of the care professionals we work with are multilingual. They bring not only language skills, but patience, emotional intelligence, cultural awareness, and lived experience that strengthens the quality of care they provide. For many families, being supported by someone who understands their culture or speaks their language is not a barrier, it is a comfort.
Diversity in care is not “nice to have”. It is essential.
Our communities here in the north east of England are diverse. Which means, needs are diverse. Therefore the workforce supporting those communities should reflect that reality, not narrow it.
When we refuse employment people because of accent or language assumptions, we don’t just limit opportunity for the care professional. We also limit choice for the individuals receiving care. We reduce connection. We reduce cultural understanding. And in many cases, we increase isolation for the very people we are trying to support.
What matters in care is not how someone sounds, but how they show up.
Do they listen properly?
Do they treat people with dignity and respect?
Do they understand needs and respond appropriately?
Do they bring reliability, compassion, and professionalism into the space they are working in?
These are the standards that matter.
We also need to be honest about the impact of micro-aggressions and racism in workplaces and care environments. Over time, they can erode confidence, create unnecessary pressure on staff to “prove” themselves, and contribute to inequality in progression and opportunity. That is not something any sector committed to good care should ignore.
At its best, care should reflect the world we live in. Multilingual, multicultural, and diverse in every sense. Not just because it looks better on paper, but because it leads to better outcomes, stronger relationships, and more inclusive support. We strongly believe that when we widen our understanding of what “good communication” looks like, we don’t lose quality. We strengthen it.
And ultimately, care should never be about how closely someone fits a stereotype. It should be about how well they support another human being to live with dignity, comfort, and respect.